Several performers took time during their concerts over the weekend to remember Mac Miller, who died Friday from an apparent drug overdose.

Performing in Allentown, Pennsylvania, for the first show of his Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour Saturday night, Sir Elton John dedicated his performance of "Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me" to the late rapper.

"I'd like to dedicate this song to Mac Miller," he told the crowd. "Unbelievably, 26 years of age, and passed away yesterday. It's inconceivable that someone so young, and with so much talent, could do that. And I just would like to pass all of our love and best wishes to his loved ones, his family, his friends. And, Mac, wherever you are, I hope you're happy now."

Childish Gambino told the crowd at his Chicago concert Saturday his "heart was broken" by the news.

“I’m a very sensitive person … but this Mac Miller (expletive) got me (expletive) up,” he said, lamenting the incessant press coverage of his death and asking concert attendees to "put your phones down."

"He's not allowed to really be dead, and we're not really allowed to be sad about this kid. He was so nice. He was the sweetest guy, he was so nice. And we were both internet music kids, and a lot of critics were like, ‘This corny white dude, this corny black dude,’ and we used to talk. And this kid, he just loved music.”

"And we should be allowed to be sad about it," he continued, dedicating his song "Riot" to Miller. "My heart was broken … and I feel good about being sad, because it tells me that he was special, that I had a special moment, you know?"

Meanwhile, in Florida Friday night, G-Eazy got emotional as he performed his song "Everything Will Be OK," stepping away from the spotlight at one point to wipe his face before commenting on Miller's death.

“I swear, life is so (expletive) fragile," he told the crowd. "Appreciate the moment, be present in it, tell people you love you care about them."

This weekend's tributes added to the many voices in music and Hollywood remembering Miller, including Miller's ex-girlfriend Ariana Grande, who shared a black-and-white photo of him on her Instagram Saturday.

Miller's 2016 album, "The Divine Feminine" captured the romantic glow at the beginning of his two-year relationship with singer/actress Ariana Grande. Here, they attend an Oscar party on March 4, 2018, in Los Angeles. JEFF KRAVITZ/FILMMAGIC

The couple, seen here at an Oscar party in March 2018, split just a few months later. After he was reportedly arrested for a DUI-related car crash in May, some fans blamed his relapse on Grande. She fired back, tweeting, "How absurd that you minimize female self-respect and self-worth by saying someone should stay in a toxic relationship because he wrote an album about them." GC IMAGES

But as the summer wore on, Miller seemed to bounce back. In August, he released a new album, "Swimming," to positive reviews. USA TODAY music writer Maeve McDermott noted that "while the album was more contemplative than his previous release, it really did sound like the work of a young person working through his issues rather than wallowing in them." SCOTT DUDELSON/GETTY IMAGES